FNP 51 Page 29 we tell them to take 1-95 or 1-75 north and do it now. What's happening to us is that the worst thing that happened to the state of Florida is when Bob Graham promoted this $25,000 a year homestead exemption. It threw the burden of property taxes now all on the businesses, and the one that's hit the hardest is agriculture. They're also the one business that depends on the weather, that buys all their stuff retail and sells all their stuff wholesale, at the mercy of whoever's buying it. That's a primary reason that agriculture is catching it so very hard now. This is your timber industry, and this is annual row crops. We're still basically an agricultural property here. Our problem now is we're getting so many people moving into North Florida [who] want an acre of land and a $2,000 mobile home, and, consequently, they're not paying any taxes. They come up here either retired and not producing any goods or services, or they come up here with a trailer full of young'uns that we've got to school. We've got to protect them with an ambulance and law enforcement and fire protection and all this other stuff, and they're not paying any taxes. That's really bringing a hard crunch in on the locals [who has] been here over the years [and] bought land and has to live off the land. P: This is still pretty conservative country, is it not? G: George Wallace was somewhat liberal, in our opinion. P: Do most people here vote Republican or Democrat? G: Most of them here are registered Democrats. They vote conservative. P: No matter the party. G: Right. Now, since we can cross lines, if we don't have a Republican or a Democratic opponent, the Republican party has really flourished out. We've gone from thirty or forty to 1,700 just in one mammoth jump, almost. We got 10,000 voters in Madison County, Florida, and we're looking now at right about 2,000 of them are Republicans and they are coming on hard and heavy. P: Well, with the legislature and the governor Republicans for the first time in the history of the state, that shows the whole state has changed. G: This pendulum, and the swingin' pendulum is what keeps the clock ticking, has swung so far to the left until it's bringing on so much resentment towards government. I owned a meat-processing plant for four years, and I had such a hard time with government until when that man in Texas, [who] owned that little meat-processing plant, killed those three government inspectors last week. I stood up and applauded him, because he did something that I wanted to do. P: Is this also OSHA, or mainly meat inspectors?